According to Holiga for the Independent, Mamic took a significant sum of Modric's transfer fee from Spurs and kept it for himself, which the investigation proved and the prosecution argue he did illegally. He is also charged with embezzlement and tax fraud.

Prior to becoming an executive at Dinamo, Mamic reportedly made an agreement with Modric that he would act as a benefactor to the player in exchange for a share of his future earnings.

As a result, Modric testified that when half of his reported €21 million transfer fee from Tottenham was paid directly to him, he would make a withdrawal at the bank after every instalment "accompanied by Mamic’s son or brother" and then give a cash payment to them.

Once Modric's transfer fee had been paid to him in full, Mamic reportedly had the full €10.5 million minus £1.7 million that Modric was allowed to keep.

Modric playing for Zagreb in 2007.EVERT JAN DANIELS/Associated Press

Mamic has admitted as much himself, but last year, Modric said an agreement in the sale—which was negotiated by Mamic—that pertained to the transfer fee being split equally between Dinamo and himself "was only signed and backdated after" he had moved to White Hart Lane.

On Tuesday, the 31-year-old was presented with his statement from last year by prosecutor Tonci Petkovic, and nervously responded: "That… That I’ve never said…that it…that…that it was drawn up afterwards. I told you then that I couldn’t remember when it had been done."

He added: "When speaking about that, I was talking about a personal contract between Mamic and me, which regulated the split of the transfer fee."

The Croatia captain is said to have forgotten a number of other details including the year of his first senior international appearance. Modric first played for Croatia in 2006, ahead of the FIFA World Cup.

Holiga explained the penalty Modric could face if found guilty of perjury:

Aleksandar Holiga @AlexHoliga

If Modrić's perjory is proven, he could be - well, according to penal system, anyway - facing a six months to five year prison sentence.

Liverpool's Dejan Lovren—who played for Zagreb between 2004 and 2010—is also set to testify at the trial, but a recess was called on Wednesday after Mamic publicly fired his lawyers in the courtroom and vowed to represent himself.

The trial will not resume for several months:

Aleksandar Holiga @AlexHoliga

Dejan Lovren was supposed to testify, but didn't get the chance. The trial is scheduled to continue in September.